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Group RRSP vs DPSP in Canada: Which Is Better?

Updated

Quick Comparison

Feature Group RRSP DPSP
Who contributes Employee and/or employer Employer only
Employee contributions Yes — uses your RRSP room No
Employer match Optional — goes into your RRSP Profit-sharing formula or discretionary
Pension adjustment (PA) No — uses existing RRSP room Yes — reduces future RRSP room
Vesting Immediate (your contributions); employer contributions vary Up to 2 years maximum
Investment control Employee chooses from plan menu Employee chooses from plan menu
Portability on leaving Transfer to personal RRSP, tax-free Transfer vested funds to RRSP/RRIF, tax-free
RRSP room effect Uses room as you contribute Reduces future room via PA
TFSA-style flexibility No — RRSP rules apply No

What Is a Group RRSP?

A group RRSP is simply a collection of individual RRSPs administered through an employer. Your account is legally your own RRSP — the employer arranges access to institutional-priced investments (often lower MERs than retail funds) and may facilitate payroll contributions.

Key features:

  • Employee contributions: Come from your paycheque pre-tax (or you contribute and claim deduction at tax time). Uses your personal RRSP contribution room.
  • Employer match: If offered, the employer’s contribution is deposited directly into your RRSP. This immediately reduces your personal RRSP room (the match is treated the same as if you made the contribution yourself).
  • No pension adjustment: Because a group RRSP match uses your existing RRSP room, no pension adjustment is generated — unlike a DPSP.
  • Portability: When you leave, the account simply remains as or converts to a personal RRSP. No tax implications, no waiting period.

What Is a DPSP?

A Deferred Profit Sharing Plan is an employer-only savings vehicle tied to company profitability. Only the employer contributes — you cannot add your own money. See DPSP Canada Guide for full details.

Key features:

  • Employer-only contributions: Your employer deposits a share of profits on your behalf. You cannot top it up.
  • Pension adjustment: Because DPSP contributions are “free” employer money going into a sheltered vehicle, they generate a PA that reduces your RRSP room the following year.
  • Vesting: Employers can require up to 2 years of employment before you “own” the DPSP contributions. If you leave before vesting, you forfeit them.
  • No employee contributions: You cannot put your own money in.

The Pension Adjustment Impact: A Key Distinction

This is the single biggest structural difference between the two plans.

Group RRSP employer match example:

  • Employer contributes $5,000 to your group RRSP
  • Your RRSP room is reduced by $5,000 immediately (you “used” $5,000 of room)
  • No PA is generated — your future RRSP limit is unaffected

DPSP example:

  • Employer contributes $5,000 to your DPSP
  • Your current RRSP room is NOT immediately reduced
  • The following year, a PA of ($5,000 − $600) = $4,400 reduces your RRSP deduction limit
  • Net effect is nearly the same, but the timing differs and it appears on your T4

In both cases, you lose approximately $5,000 of RRSP room — the DPSP just does it one year later via the PA mechanism.

Vesting Risk: Why It Matters

Group RRSP employer matches are often subject to vesting schedules (e.g., you must stay 1–3 years to keep matched funds). DPSP contributions by law vest in no more than 2 years.

Scenario Group RRSP outcome DPSP outcome
Leave after 6 months May forfeit employer match if vesting applies Forfeit all DPSP contributions
Leave after 2 years Typically fully vested Must be fully vested by law
Retire at plan Full account balance rolls to personal RRSP Full vested balance transfers to RRSP/RRIF

At departure, unvested group RRSP employer contributions and all unvested DPSP funds are returned to the employer. Forfeited DPSP funds generate a PAR (Pension Adjustment Reversal) that restores the RRSP room you lost.

Investment Options

Both group RRSPs and DPSPs typically offer a menu of mutual funds or ETFs selected by the employer’s plan administrator. Neither offers the full breadth of a self-directed brokerage account.

Institutional fund pricing is one of the main benefits — group plan MERs are often significantly lower than retail mutual funds available to individual investors.

Which Should You Prioritize?

  1. Always capture the full employer match first. Whether through a group RRSP or a DPSP, employer contributions are the highest-return part of workplace savings.

  2. If your employer offers a group RRSP match AND a DPSP, maximize whichever has the richer match and ensure you understand vesting timelines for each.

  3. After capturing the match, direct additional savings to:

    • Personal RRSP (if you have remaining room)
    • TFSA (not affected by PAs, fully flexible)
  4. If you are job-hopping frequently and vesting hasn’t been met, note that you may be giving up unvested funds — factor this into job-change timing if the dollar amounts are significant.

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